The 12 active NBA players who are Hall of Fame locks

The Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame added 11 new members on Saturday with the 2017 class, which includes Tracy McGrady, Rebecca Lobo and Jerry Krause.

As great as McGrady was in the NBA, there weren't any real locks in this year's class — as evidenced by Chris Webber's exclusion. But there are a number of certain Hall of Famers currently wrapping up another season.

Here are the 12 active NBA players who are Hall of Fame locks, listed according to their Basketball-Reference Hall of Fame probability, plus a few potential snubs and a handful of stars well on their way to joining this exclusive club.

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LeBron James

Basketball-Reference Hall of Fame probability: 100 percent

Obviously. Next!

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Dwyane Wade

Basketball-Reference Hall of Fame probability: 100 percent

Also obviously. Next!

Dirk Nowitzki

Basketball-Reference Hall of Fame probability: 100 percent

The guy who beat the two "obviously" guys above for a championship and redefined how the NBA views international players? Also a lock.

Next!

Chris Paul

Basketball-Reference Hall of Fame probability: 99.99 percent

Paul's detractors will point out he's never made a conference finals, let alone the NBA Finals, but the man has played his entire career in the West. Through sheer probability, there was going to be one superstar who couldn't manage to break through in that gauntlet of a conference.

CP3 is one of the greatest point guards ever. He's a lock.

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Paul Pierce

Basketball-Reference Hall of Fame probability: 99.74 percent

The Truth is a Hall of Famer based on his Boston career alone. Helping the Clippers shock the Warriors in the playoffs this year would be icing on the cake — although it's probably not happening.

Carmelo Anthony

Basketball-Reference Hall of Fame probability: 98.18 percent

Remember, it's the Basketball Hall of Fame, not the NBA Hall of Fame. Melo's Olympic career and national championship at Syracuse make up for his shortcomings in the Association.

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Russell Westbrook

Basketball-Reference Hall of Fame probability: 95.45 percent

If you average a triple-double over an 82-game season, you're a Hall of Famer, no matter what else happens in your career.

Stephen Curry

Basketball-Reference Hall of Fame probability: 95.07 percent

Curry locked up his Hall of Fame invitation when he became the only unanimous MVP in NBA history. Assuming this 3-point revolution holds, he'll also set the all-time record for most threes and get credit for completely changing the game of basketball.